http://users.sisqtel.net/armstrng/opinion013009.htm
Excerpt from Marcia Armstrong's opinion column on Yreka FERC
meeting regarding dam removal Agreement In Principle
FERC DAM MEETING: Confusion reigned at last week’s Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) meeting on the Klamath River
dams as the Commission tried to figure out how it fit with the
Agreement In Principle (AIP) signed by PacifiCorp, The Dept. of
Interior and the States of California and Oregon. The AIP
establishes a set of conditions under which the U.S. Secretary of
Interior would do the necessary studies and cost/benefit analysis
to decide whether four dams are to be removed on the Klamath
River.
Dr. John Mudre gave a presentation on six actions that the
Commission is authorized to take under the Federal Power Act. (1)
It can issue a license to operate the hydropower facilities. (FERC
has already done the necessary work to issue the license, has
established the conditions for relicensing and now awaits a clean
Water Act certification from the two States to finalize. It is
presumed that getting this will be difficult.) (2) It can deny the
license and refer to license surrender proceedings. (3) After
studies are done, surrender proceedings may result in dam removal.
(4) It can transfer a license. (5) it can issue a non-power
license for just a dam. (6) It can proceed with a federal take
over of the facility.
Mudre also explained that FERC established a policy in 2006
regarding “Settlement Agreements” by interested parties. These are
contractual agreements worked out by affected parties rather than
going to court. FERC favors such agreements, but does not
automatically accept them and must make a determination that they
are in the public interest. They also must be focused on
provisions within the jurisdiction and authority of the FERC and
enforceable by the Commission. FERC should be involved in the
development of such agreements and they must be brought before the
Commission for approval.
It was determined that the only provisions being worked on that
would qualify as a “Settlement Agreement,” under FERC were interim
measures to be taken to protect endangered coho and sucker fish
while the AIP was in progress. The vast bulk of the KBRA (Klamath
Basin Restoration Agreement) is entirely outside the jurisdiction
of FERC and Siskiyou County remains opposed to this agreement. I
raised the issue, then, whether the secretive meetings of selected
interests required to sign confidentiality and good faith
agreements favoring dam removal were allowable under FACA –
Federal Advisory Committee Act, since these weren’t settlement
agreements under FERC. The DOI Representative indicated he would
get back to me on that.
It became very clear that the whole relicensing/dam
decommissioning issue is being removed from the normal FERC
process and, through anticipated Congressional Legislation, will
become an administrative decision under the Secretary of the
Interior. After significant study, should he decide that the
benefits of dam relicensing outweigh the costs, then the FERC
process will go back to the point where it is presently, with a
legislative waiver of Clean Water Act certification. If he decides
that the costs outweigh the benefits, then ownership of the dams
will be transferred to a third party and they will be removed by
2020-2025.
Because the process has moved out from under FERC, the protections
in that act for public input are no longer in place. The current
AIP is essentially a negotiation between PacifiCorp and the
Federal and State governments to establish a framework on how to
proceed along this new (to be legislated) Administrative path. Our
input is to ensure that various impacts to Siskiyou County are
properly mitigated, health and safety concerns are fully
addressed, and that the science is sound. In response to my
concerns expressed at the meeting that a public process be
preserved, I received assurances from the Dept. of Interior
representative that the decision making process would be subject
to NEPA – the National Environmental Policy Act.
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